The primary electron/hole pair is amplified (photodetector with internal gain). From photons to an .... PIN photodiodes first large scale application of Si sensors for low light level detection. They were ...... Sourcemeter. Interactive SiPM demo ...
Tutorial SiPMs Véronique PUILL
Outline The photodetection process in Silicon devices
The main Si detector characteristics From the PIN photodiode to the SiPM Caracteristics of SiPM Quick look on some other structures: digital SiPM, Resistor embedded in the bulk
Véronique PUILL (LAL), NDIP14, SIPM tutorial Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
Basic principle of the Photodetection Goal of the Photodetection: convert Photons into a detectable electrical signal
photon
(nm)
Photodetector
1. Photoconversion: photoelectric effect
photoelectron
electrical signal photon
Readout chain
2. Photo-electron collection 3. Signal multiplication 3 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
From photons to an electrical signal Phase 1 : the Photoconversion in Si Step 1: Absorption of the photon () in the material and generation of electrons Beer-Lambert law
I(, z) I()e()z
Band gap (T=300K) = 1.12 eV (~1100 nm)
I(λ) : initial photon flux I(λ,z) : photon flux on the distance z from SiPM surface α(λ): optical absorption coefficient z : penetrated thickness in Si
Most of the photon absorption (63%) occurs over a distance 1/α (it is called penetration depth δ) If E > Eg, electrons are lifted to conduction band for Si-photodetector this leads to a photocurrent: internal photoelectric effect 4 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
From photons to an electrical signal Phase 2: the Photoelectron collection Once created, the electron/hole pair can be lost (absorption, recombination)
Need of a good collection efficiency (CE): probability to transfer the primary p.e or e/h to the readout channel or the amplification region
Phase 3: the signal multiplication The primary electron/hole pair is amplified (photodetector with internal gain) Some photodetectors incorporate internal gain mechanisms so that the photoelectron current can be physically amplified within the detector and thus make the signal more easily detectable.
5 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
The main Si detector characteristics Sensitivity Noise
Gain Linearity Time response
6
Sensitivity Probability that the incident photon (Nγ) generates a photoelectron (Npe) that contributes to the detector current
Radiant sensitivity P(W)
Nγ
photodet
photodet
Quantum efficiency
Sensitivity x Gain x Npe
Q[%]
Npe Nγ
I(A)
Q[%] xλ[nm] xqe hxc Q[%] xλ[nm] 124
S[mA/W]
Photo detection efficiency (SiPM) PDE [%] = geom [%]× Q[%]×Ptrig [%]
geom: geometrical factor Ptrig: triggering probability 7 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
Gain and its fluctuations In high electric field ( 105 V ⋅ cm−1 ) the carriers are accelerated and can rich an energy higher than the ionization energy of valent electrons impact ionisation process multiplication
Gain (G): charge of the pulse when one photon is detected divided by the electron charge 𝐺=
𝑄𝑠𝑖𝑔𝑛𝑎𝑙 𝑞𝑒
The photodetector output current fluctuates. The noise in this signal arises from 2 sources: randomness in the photon arrivals randomness in the carrier multiplication process The statistical fluctuation of the avalanche multiplication which widen the response of a photodetector to a given photon signal beyond what would be expected from simple photoelectron statistics (Poisson) is characterized by the excess noise factor ENF
ENF 1 ENF
2 G
G²
impacts the photon counting capability for low light measurements deteriorates the stochastic term in the energy resolution of a calorimeter
8 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
Photodetector noise Principal noises associated with photodetectors : Physical detection stage
signal processing stage Display or storage
photodet amplification shaping
Shot noise:
Dark current noise:
statistical nature of the production and collection of photo-generated electrons upon optical illumination (the statistics follow a Poisson process)
the current that continues to flow through the bias circuit in the absence of the light : bulk dark current due to thermally generated charges surface dark current due to surface defects
The dark noise depends a lot on the threshold not a big issue when we want to detect hundreds or thousands of photons but crucial in the case of very weak incident flux ….
9 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
Linearity Ideally, the photocurrent response of the photodetector is linear with incident radiation over a wide range. Any variation in responsivity with incident radiation represents a variation in the linearity of the detector saturated (non linear) Idet Flux linear region
Idet = Flux output signal
Output signal
IDEAL
Incident Flux (photons/s)
input signal (incident number of photons)
Saturation: issue for the measurement of large number of photons (calorimeter) 10 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
Time response phphotons Dirac light
photodet
Δt TRANSIT TIME Δt
Electrical signal
Timing parameters of the signal: Rise time, fall time (or decay time) Duration Transit time (Δt): time between the arrival of the photon and the electrical signal Transit time spread (TTS): transit time variation between different events timing resolution
Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
From the PIN photodiode to SiPM
Pour plus de modèles : Modèles Powerpoint PPT gratuits
12 Véronique PUILL (LAL), NDIP14, Page SIPM tutorial
The PIN photodiode Schematic structure of an idealized PIN PD p-i-n junction structure based on the internal photoelectric effect: intrinsic region sandwiched between heavily doped p+ and n+ layers
S.O Kasap, Optoelectronics, 1999
Charge density
Built-in field
Absorption of photon in the depletion layer (1 – 3 µm) generation of e- and holes The internal electric field sweeps the e- to the n+ side and the hole to the p+ side a drift current that flows in the reverse direction from the n+ side (cathode) to the p+ side (anode) This transport process induces an electric current in the external circuit.
PIN PD in reverse mode
I0 : thermal-generated free carriers which flow through the junction 13 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
The PIN photodiode PIN photodiodes first large scale application of Si sensors for low light level detection. They were developed to find a replacement for PMTs in high HEP experiments (high magnetic fields)
Example of PIN photodiode (Hamamatsu data sheet)
high QE (80% @ 700nm) Gain = 1
14 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
The Avalanche Photodiode 1. large reverse bias across the junction (50 - 200 V) 2. high electric field ( 105V/ cm) in the depletion-layer 3. the generated e- and holes may acquire sufficient energy to liberate more e- and holes within this layer by a process of impact ionization multiplication Ionization coefficients for electrons and for holes
The avalanche process is one directional and self quenched when carriers reach the border of depleted area. avalanche process created only by the e15 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
The Avalanche Photodiode 1000
Gain
800 600 400 200 0 0
100
200
300
400
500
Bias Voltage [V]
D. Renker, 2009 JINST 4 P04004
1200
APDs ( 120000) in the ECAL of CMS
Bias voltage : 50 – 200 V high QE (80% @ 700nm) Gain = 50 – 100 high variation with temp. and bias voltage : G = 3.1%/V and -2.4 %/°C (gain= 50) 16 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
From PIN photodiode to Geiger mode APD Geiger mode -APD • • •
Vbias > VBD G single photon level
R.H. Haitz.,, J. Appl. Phys. 35 (1964)
Photodiode
APD • • •
VAPD < Vbias < VBD G = M (50 - 100) Linear-mode operation
• • •
0 < Vbias < VAPD (few volts) G=1 Operate at high light level (few hundreds of photons) 17 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
The Geiger mode APD
breakdown
G = 105-106 equivalent electrical circuit
both type of carriers participate in the avalanche process creation of a self-sustaining avalanche current rises exponentially with time and reach the breakdown condition. No internal “turn-off” the avalanche process must be quenched by the voltage drop across a serial resistor : quenching resistor
Rs=50
output signal
output h GM-APD
Rq n+ (K) p++ (A)
Current (a.u.)
Valeri Saveliev, ISBN 978-953-7619-76-3
Schematic structure of a G-M APD
1 – 10 – 1000 photons same amplitude Q
Q
Q
-Vbias Time (a.u.)
output charge is not proportional to the number of of incident photons 18 Véronique PUILL, NDIP14, SIPM tutorial
Structure and principle of a SiPM KETEK web site
N photons
Valeri Saveliev, ISBN 978-953-7619-76-3
GM-APDs (cell) connected in parallel (few hundreds/mm²) Each cell is reverse biased above breakdown Self quenching of the Geiger breakdown by individual serial resistors
Each element is independent and gives the same signal when fired by a photon
output charge is proportional to the number of of incident photons overlap display of pulse waveforms
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G. Bisogni, RESMDD10
Development of the signal in a cell equivalent electrical circuit of a SiPM cell
Time sequence
VBD : breakdown voltage RQ : quenching resistance RS : Si subtrate serie resistance CD : diode capacitance VBIAS : bias voltage
Vbias > Vbd
t=0: carrier initiates the avalanche
quiescient mode, switch opened If no photon or no dark event, the current stay stable A B : avalanche triggered, switch closed CD discharges to VBD with the time constant R C asymptotic grows of the current S
0